Mining The Northwest's Red Gold
Cedars take off
With the introduction of helicopters to this area only a few years ago, the yarder system was eliminated and the cedar bolt industry launched to new heights of production. The logs are now bucked into 24-inch (61-cm) lengths at the site and further split into bolts. The bolts are slung into 1,200-pound (540-kg) bundles that are hooked by the helicopter and delivered to the landing.
Today, the cedar bolt industry is employing a host of operators with small piston and turbine helicopters. Red gold is being mined with Bell 47s, Aerospatiale Alouettes, Hiller 12s, and even Bell JetRangers.
Joe Anderson's Pacific Helicopters Inc., based near Salem, Ore., has tapped this new market for its three Hiller UH-12-J3 Soloy Conversions. Anderson provides his aircraft, pilot, mechanic, assistant mechanic, and support truck to the logging company for $225 an hour.
With an average 1,200-pound (540-kg) payload, one of Anderson's Soloy Conversions consumes 24 to 27 gallons (83 to 90 l) of fuel per hour. Under average weather condiitons and terrain and with a 50- to 75-foot (15- to 22-m) line, he reported that it can deliver 10 to 12 cords of cedar per hour.
Under ideal conditions with landings just behond tossing distance, production can be doubled. "I have delivered 67 cords in three hours," related Joe Anderson, "but that is the exception rather than the rule."
"In difficult terrain with a lot of old snags, it is sometimes necessary to use a 100-to 150-foot line or longer," explained pilot Dan Cobb. "Then your production drops because of the maneuvering required to thread that line down to the hookers who are more difficult to see. I have flown with a 250-foot lead, but you could barely pick out the hookers from that altitude.
(It would probably be a good idea to point out to the uninitiated that a "hooker," in logging circles, is athe person who hooks up the logs to the helicopter or yarder system.)
"Cedar can be deceiving in moisture content," Anderson added. "We must use an onboard weighing system to regulate the load bundles. Also the steep slopes make it more difficult for the ground crews to accurately judge their loads."
"Snags are one of the primary hazards to the helicopter, since they stick up from 150 to 250 feet," he observed. "With an engine failure you wouldn't have anyplace to set down in the heavy timber, but we have never had an engine failure with the Soloy Conversion."
Anderson purchased his first J3 Hiller two years ago and followed it with two more in May 1977.
"I have always been partial to Hillers," he admitted. "They have proven to be a reliable workship. With the turbine conversion, we have experienced not only more power but also a 70 percent maintenance cost savings. Our first ship now has over 960 hours without any unscheduled maintenance."
"With our turbine, we can operate at maximum gross weight constantly regardless of altitude or temperature. Our average operationa cost is only $125 an hour, compared to over $170 an hour with our old recip. I would attribute most of our savings to maintenance. With over 900 hours per machine per year, we are also benefitting from
a seven percent insurance rate compared to the average of eight or nine percent," said Anderson.
He attributes much of his success in cedar logging to his experienced pilots. Chief Pilot Bill Reed has logged over 1,000 hours in Hillers with 400 of those in the Soloy machine. Thirteen year Marine Corps veteran Dan Cobb has spent over 1,500 of his 5,000 hours in the logging industry, principally In the big tandem rotor Boeing Vertol helicopters.
Anderson's customers Include J&W Shake Co. and Pacific Cedar Logging, the principal cedar salvager working the Boise Cascade timberlands. Bull Buck (logging boss) Joe Hatfield is exuberant over the utilization of helicopters in his operation.
Cash in cords
Pacific Cedar markets the bolts to J&W Shake Co, for $210 to $230 per cord in the Olympia/Vancouver area. Paying low Oregon stumpages of only $25 to $60 per cord, depending on quality and density, with cutters averaging $70 to $80 per cord on a piecework basis, Pacific Cedar Logging enjoys a comfortable profit margin without massive equipment investment.
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Accordion: A bucked log with a series of shallow shelves across the end, caused by poor bucking. Against the log: A logging road grade where loads have to be hauled uphill. Ax'er; To cut something loose in a hurry to avoid an accident. Back 'er up: To cut the back side of a tree after the undercut has been put in. Backfire: A very tricky job in fighting forest fires-setting fire in front of an onrushing main blaze. Barber chair: A tree that is split up the trunk in falling, leaving the split portion on the stump instead of breaking through cleanly to the undercut. Bearing tree: A tree marked to identify a survey corner. Biltmore: A stick used by cruisers to estimate height and diameter of trees, developed by the Biltmore Forestry School, Black gang: Loggers salvaging timber recently burned by forest fire. Blind conk: Hidden decay in a tree. Blow up: A fire that blazes up suddenly. Bolt: A chunk of wood split or cut from a log generally for shakes or shingles. Bucker: A man who cuts felled trees into log lengths. Bug kill: Timber killed by insects. Bull buck: Boss of fallers and buckers. Bushel; To fall or buck by piecework rather than by daily wage. Calks (or corks): Spiked woods shoes to give sure footing on logs. Cedar fever: An itch sometimes affecting men working with red cedar. |
Cedar savage: A logger working for a shingle bolt outfit. Choker setter: The man who puts a steel cable or choker around logs to be yarded. Clear cut: An area from which all timber has been removed. Cold dock: To stack logs in a pile. Cord: A measure of wood referring to a pile four by four by eight feet, or 128 cubic feet. Cruiser (or timber cruiser): The man who estimates the quantity and quality of standing timber in a given area. Deadfall: A trap of any kind; a dangerous situation. The expression comes from early-day bear traps that were built so that logs would be released by a trigger, fall on a bear and crush him to death. Dehorn: To knock limbs off logs. Devil dust: False smoke leading a watcher to believe a forest fire is starting. Grade: Duality of a log. Green cut: Logs cut from live timber. Greening up (or haired up): A cutover area in which vegetation is starting to return after a heavy fire. Gut a show: To take only the very best logs out of a stand of timber. Gypo: To log by contract. Haul: The distance over which logs are yarded. Hazel hoe: A light hoe used for tree planting. High lead: The widely used system of logging using a spar tree that carries the main line and haulback cables through blocks high above the ground. The high lead was a great advance over the low lead or ground lead method that it replaced, because in the latter |
the logs were merely dragged on the ground and hung up on every rock and stump. Hoot owl: To begin work early in the morning, as near daylight as possible, in order to get in a day's work before having to close down because of low humidity during the heat of the day. Humpback: A logging truck returning to the woods with its trailer on its back. Hung tree: A tree that becomes jammed against another as it starts to fall. Such trees are difficult and often dangerous to release. Irish coupling: Logs not completely bucked through. Jim Crow load: A one log load. Kick back: The action of a falling tree in springing back off the stump as it comes down, Landing: Flat ground where logs are yarded to be loaded onto trucks. Leave strip: A strip of timber uncut between two clear cut areas. Log brand: An ownership mark stamped into the end of a log to identify it when mixed with the other logs. Log brands are registered by law. Looper: A small moth whose larval stage is a serious killer of coast timber. Make bed: A leveling operation that will allow a tree to fall on at least three points all on one plane; made by bulldozing off humps and filling holes, Needle scratching; Forester making seedling counts on cutover land. Old growth: Virgin uncut timber. Peeler: A log suitable for plywood, Pulaski: A tool with an ax on one side and a light grub hoe on the other.
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Scale: The number of board feet in a log. Second growth: Young timber. In Douglas fir stands, applied to all stages of growth between saplings and red fir. Single jack: To work alone as a faller. Skidder system: A skyline method of logging -especially useful in rough country using a standing line, a big trolly, and a slack pulling system to lower the butt rigging to the crew. Sleeper: A holdover fire. Square: A measure of shingles or shakes; enough to cover 100 square f eat, Stage cut: To fall timber in several rounds or successive cuts in order to reduce breakage. Strip adjustment: A deal whereby a faller gets a little better rate for rough ground, scattered timber, etc. Stumpage: The price paid for timber. Sustained yield: A program of growing about as much timber in a given period as is cut curing that period. Tally: In cruising timber, a measure of distance; five chains or 330 feet (99 m). Undercut: The first cut made in a tree. Whistle punk: The man or boy who passes signals from the choker setter to the donkey engineer when yarding logs. The starting job in a logging crew. A lot of fun is made of a green whistle punk, but if he makes a mistake in signals there will be fewer choker setters around. Widow maker: A loose limb, top, or piece of bark that may fall on a logger working beneath it. Yarder: An engine used to haul logs from stump to landing. |
Peninsula Helicopters' General Manager John Ruhl has flown cedar for over a year since his discharge from the Army.
"One advantage from a pilot's
viewpoint though," Ruhl added, "is that pilots working cedar
are rarely away from home, which compensates for the critical
demands on a pilot's skill." The cedar
rustler ripoff
Gunter emphasized the need for safety in his operation: "In the late1960s when helicopters were first used for hauling cedar on the Olympic Peninsula, 90 percent of the helicopter accidents In the Northwest were around here. The old recips couldn't stand the stress of continual cedar operations. Changing to turbine engines reduced vibration."
Gunter also finds pilot, fatigue one of the most critical safety factors: "We try not to schedule more than five hours a day flying time," Gunter explained, "with an average total of 80 hours per month. Although we've actually been running closer to 100 hours per month per ship."
"I can't stress maintenance enough," Gunter concluded. "Working in isolated areas, logistic support is often inade-quate so preventive maintenance is critical. With nine operators working the peninsula, this is a highly competitive market, but there's just no room in this business for short cuts!"
Bottom to the gold mine?
Without an established reforestation program, the future of cedar salvage is somewhat uncertain: Joe Hatfield of Pacific Cedar Logging estimated at least 15 to 20 years before cedar supplies dwindle beyond the commercially prof-itable level.
Weathershed is more optimistic about the future of cedar shakes. "Ten years ago, people were saying there were only about five years left in the business," said Loren Lindstrom. "With current mill technology, wood previously considered unsuitable can now be utilized and with the introduction of helicopters, cedar previously considered unprofitable because of its location is now readily accessible. I also expect a development of technology to utilize other species for shakes as well."
Although market projections vary from operator to operator, all agree the helicopter will continue to be an integral part of the shake industry.